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Does C++ stl have a standard time class? Or do I have to convert to c-string before writing to a stream. Example, I want to output the current date/time to a string stream:

time_t tm();
ostringstream sout;
sout << tm << ends;

In this case I get the current date/time written out as a number without any formatting. I can use c- runtime function strftime to format tm first, but that seems like it should not be necessary if the stl has a time class that can be instantiated from time_t value

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4 Answers

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Not part of STL but well known library is boost.

I would go the way of using boost::date. Here are some examples: http://www.boost.org/doc/libs/1_40_0/doc/html/date_time/date_time_io.html#date_time.io_tutorial.

If you did not try out boost yet I encourage you to do so as it saves you from a lot of nasty issues, as it masks most OS dependent things like threading for example. Many things in boost are header only (template libraries). However datetime requires a lib or dll.

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vote up 2 vote down

There is also a ctime(&time_t) method which outputs string (char*).

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Which isn't exactly helpful unless you need exactly that date/time format. Looking at it is only makes me shiver, though; I don't think I'd ever want to see that in an application. – Johannes Rössel Oct 30 at 16:22
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Nitpicking: The STL being the Standard Template Library deals with generic container and algorithms etc. and is unlikely to incorporate classes for date handling and calculation even in the future…

The C++ Standard Library itself includes the STL and a previous version of the C standard library. The latter offers some date and time related functions via #include <ctime> which has already been mentioned above.

If wrapping (or simply using) these functions is sufficient (and quicker) than pulling in boost, go with these. There is nothing wrong with them.

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vote up 0 vote down

OK. Here is closest I have found about directly writing time to a stream:

time_t t(time(NULL));	// current time
tm tm(*localtime(&t));	

std::locale loc("");	// current user locale
ostringstream sout;
const std::time_put<TCHAR> &tput =
	std::use_facet<std::time_put<TCHAR> >(loc);
tput.put(sout.rdbuf(), sout, _T('\0'), &tm, _T('x'));
sout << ends;

CString sTest(sout.str().c_str());

A very helpful guide is the Apache C++ Standard Library Reference Guide http://stdcxx.apache.org/doc/stdlibref/time-put.html#sec13

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